Astronomy, -AST
Human beings have long been fascinated by the celestial sphere above, whose twinkling lights have inspired not only scientific theories but also many artistic endeavors. Humankind's fascination with the world beyond Earth has led to many landmark moments in history, as when space exploration took a giant step forward with the advent of technology that allowed humans to successfully travel to the Moon and to build spacecraft capable of exploring the rest of the solar system and beyond.
Astronomy Encyclopedia Articles By Title
2001 Mars Odyssey, U.S. spacecraft that studied Mars from orbit and served as a communication relay for the Mars......
What is an eclipse? An eclipse occurs when one celestial body passes in front of another and obscures it. On Earth......
21-centimetre radiation, electromagnetic radiation of radio wavelength emitted by cold, neutral, interstellar hydrogen......
51 Pegasi, fifth-magnitude star located 48 light-years away from Earth in the constellation Pegasus, the first......
51 Pegasi b, the first extrasolar planet confirmed to orbit a sunlike star. The planet orbits a fifth-magnitude......
61 Cygni, first star whose distance from Earth was measured. German astronomer Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel obtained......
Charles Greeley Abbot was an American astrophysicist who, as director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory......
constant of aberration, in astronomy, the maximum amount of the apparent yearly aberrational displacement of a......
Abū al-Wafāʾ was a distinguished Muslim astronomer and mathematician, who made important contributions to the development......
Joseph Acaba is an American astronaut who, over three spaceflights to the International Space Station (ISS), has......
accretion disk, a disklike flow of gas, plasma, dust, or particles around any astronomical object in which the......
Achernar, brightest star in the constellation Eridanus and the ninth brightest star in the sky. Achernar (Arabic......
achondrite, any stony meteorite containing no chondrules (small, roughly spherical objects that formed in the solar......
active galactic nucleus (AGN), small region at the centre of a galaxy that emits a prodigious amount of energy......
John Couch Adams was a British mathematician and astronomer, one of two people who independently discovered the......
Walter Adams was an American astronomer who is best known for his spectroscopic studies. Using the spectroscope,......
Adhara, the 22nd brightest star in the sky and one of the 57 stars of celestial navigation. The Bayer designation......
AG catalog, compilation of the positions of all stars brighter than the ninth magnitude, compiled by the Astronomische......
AIM, U.S. satellite designed to study noctilucent clouds. AIM was launched on April 25, 2007, by a Pegasus XL rocket......
Sir George Biddell Airy was an English scientist who was astronomer royal from 1835 to 1881. Airy graduated from......
Robert Grant Aitken was an American astronomer who specialized in the study of double stars, of which he discovered......
Akari, Japanese satellite observatory that carried a 67-cm (26-inch) near- to far-infrared telescope. On February......
Akatsuki, space probe that investigated Venus in Japan’s first mission to the planet. An H-IIA rocket launched......
Akiyama Toyohiro is a Japanese journalist and television reporter, the first Japanese citizen and the first journalist......
Sultan ibn Salman Al Saud is an astronaut who was the first Saudi Arabian citizen, the first Arab, the first Muslim,......
ʿAlam al-Dīn al-Ḥanafī was an Egyptian mathematician, astronomer, and engineer. He wrote a treatise on Euclid’s......
Alcor, star with apparent magnitude of 4.01. Alcor makes a visual double with the brighter star Mizar in the middle......
Aldebaran, reddish giant star in the constellation Taurus. Aldebaran is one of the 15 brightest stars, with an......
Buzz Aldrin is an American astronaut who was the second person to set foot on the Moon. A graduate of the U.S.......
Alfonsine Tables, the first set of astronomical tables prepared in Christian Europe. They enabled calculation of......
Hannes Alfvén was an astrophysicist and winner, with Louis Néel of France, of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1970......
Algol, prototype of a class of variable stars called eclipsing binaries, the second brightest star in the northern......
ALH84001, meteorite determined to have come from Mars and the subject of a contentious scientific claim that it......
alien, hypothetical intelligent extraterrestrial being. See extraterrestrial intelligence. See also extraterrestrial......
Allende meteorite, meteorite that fell as a shower of stones (see meteorite shower) after breaking up in the atmosphere......
Almagest, astronomical manual written about 150 ce by Ptolemy (Claudius Ptolemaeus of Alexandria). It served as......
almucantar, in astronomy, any circle of the celestial sphere parallel to the horizon; when two objects are on the......
Alpha Centauri, triple star system, the faintest component of which, Proxima Centauri, is the closest star to the......
Alpha Crucis, brightest star in the southern constellation Crux (the Southern Cross) and the 13th brightest star......
Altair, the brighest star in the northern constellation Aquila and the 12th brightest star in the sky. With the......
altitude and azimuth, in astronomy, gunnery, navigation, and other fields, two coordinates describing the position......
Amalthea, small, potato-shaped moon of the planet Jupiter and the only Jovian satellite other than the four discovered......
Amaterasu, (Japanese: “Great Divinity Illuminating Heaven”), the celestial sun goddess from whom the Japanese imperial......
Viktor Ambartsumian was a Soviet astronomer and astrophysicist best known for his theories concerning the origin......
Giovanni Battista Amici was an astronomer and optician who made important improvements in the mirrors of reflecting......
Anaxagoras was a Greek philosopher of nature remembered for his cosmology and for his discovery of the true cause......
Anaximander was a Greek philosopher who was the first to develop a cosmology, or systematic philosophical view......
Anaximenes Of Miletus was a Greek philosopher of nature and one of three thinkers of Miletus traditionally considered......
William A. Anders was a U.S. astronaut who participated in the Apollo 8 flight (December 21–27, 1968), during which......
Andromeda, in astronomy, constellation of the northern sky at about one hour right ascension and 40° north declination.......
Andromeda Galaxy, (catalog numbers NGC 224 and M31), great spiral galaxy in the constellation Andromeda, the nearest......
Andronicus of Cyrrhus was a Greek astronomer best known as the architect of the horologium at Athens called the......
Roger Angel is a British-born American astronomer whose lightweight mirror designs enabled the construction of......
Mylswamy Annadurai is an Indian aerospace engineer who held a number of posts with the Indian Space Research Organisation......
anomaly, in astronomy, originally the nonuniform (anomalous) apparent motions of the planets. In present usage,......
Anousheh Ansari is an Iranian-born American businesswoman who was the first female space tourist, the first person......
Antarctic meteorite, any of a large group of meteorites that have been collected in Antarctica, first by Japanese......
Antares, red, semiregular variable star, with apparent visual magnitude about 1.1, the brightest star in the zodiacal......
anthropic principle, in cosmology, any consideration of the structure of the universe, the values of the constants......
Antikythera mechanism, ancient Greek mechanical device used to calculate and display information about astronomical......
Antlia, constellation in the southern sky at about 10 hours right ascension and 30° south in declination. Its brightest......
Aouelloul Crater, large crater located 28 mi (45 km) southwest of Chinguetti, Mauritania, and thought to stem from......
aphelion, in astronomy, the point in the orbit of a planet, comet, or other body most distant from the Sun. When......
Aphrodite Terra, the largest of three continent-sized highland areas (terrae) on the planet Venus. Aphrodite extends......
Apollo, project conducted by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in the 1960s and ’70s......
Apollo 11, U.S. spaceflight during which commander Neil Armstrong and lunar module pilot Edwin (“Buzz”) Aldrin,......
Apollo 13, U.S. spaceflight, launched on April 11, 1970, that suffered an oxygen tank explosion en route to the......
Apollo 17, U.S. crewed spaceflight to the Moon, launched on December 7, 1972, and successfully concluded on December......
Apollonius of Perga was a mathematician, known by his contemporaries as “the Great Geometer,” whose treatise Conics......
Apophis, asteroid classified as a Near-Earth Object (NEO) and a Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (PHA). It is approximately......
Apus, constellation in the southern sky at about 16 hours right ascension and 80° south in declination. Its brightest......
Aquarius, in astronomy, zodiacal constellation lying in the southern sky between Capricornus and Pisces, at about......
Aquila, constellation in the northern sky, at about 20 hours right ascension and on the celestial equator in declination.......
Ara, constellation in the southern sky, at about 17 hours right ascension and 55° south in declination. Ara has......
Arcturus, the fourth brightest star in the night sky, and the brightest star in the northern constellation Boötes,......
Area 51, secret U.S. Air Force military installation located at Groom Lake in southern Nevada. It is administered......
Arecibo Observatory, astronomical observatory located 16 km (10 miles) south of the town of Arecibo in Puerto Rico.......
Ares, family of two launch vehicles, Ares I and Ares V, for the proposed Constellation program, the crewed U.S.......
Friedrich Wilhelm August Argelander was a German astronomer who established the study of variable stars as an independent......
Ariane, family of launch vehicles developed as a means of independent access to space for the European Space Agency......
Ariel, the first international cooperative Earth satellite, launched April 26, 1962, as a joint project of agencies......
Ariel, second nearest of the five major moons of Uranus. It was discovered in 1851 by William Lassell, an English......
Aries, in astronomy, zodiacal constellation in the northern sky lying between Pisces and Taurus, at about 3 hours......
Aristarchus of Samos was a Greek astronomer who maintained that Earth rotates on its axis and revolves around the......
armillary sphere, early astronomical device for representing the great circles of the heavens, including in the......
Neil Armstrong was a U.S. astronaut, and the first person to set foot on the Moon. Neil Armstrong was the eldest......
Halton Christian Arp was an American astronomer noted for challenging the theory that redshifts of quasars indicate......
Heinrich Louis d’Arrest was a German astronomer who, while a student at the Berlin Observatory, hastened the discovery......
Artemis, U.S. crewed spaceflight program begun in 2017 that is intended to return astronauts to the Moon during......
Aryabhata, first unmanned Earth satellite built by India. It was named for a prominent Indian astronomer and mathematician......
Aryabhata was an astronomer and the earliest Indian mathematician whose work and history are available to modern......
asterism, a pattern of stars that is not a constellation. An asterism can be part of a constellation, such as the......
asteroid, any of a host of small bodies, about 1,000 km (600 miles) or less in diameter, that orbit the Sun primarily......
astrobiology, a multidisciplinary field dealing with the nature, existence, and search for extraterrestrial life......
astrolabe, any of a type of early scientific instrument used for reckoning time and for observational purposes.......
astronaut, designation, derived from the Greek words for “star” and “sailor,” commonly applied to an individual......
astronomical map, any cartographic representation of the stars, galaxies, or surfaces of the planets and the Moon.......
astronomical observatory, any structure containing telescopes and auxiliary instruments with which to observe celestial......
astronomical unit (AU, or au), a unit of length effectively equal to the average, or mean, distance between Earth......